Why India Should Not Trust Any Other Country – A Reality Check for Bharat

Why India Should Not Trust Any Other Country – A Reality Check for Bharat
In the theatre of global politics, nations are not friends. They are actors — each wearing a mask of diplomacy while chasing their selfish interests backstage. In such a world, if India still clings to outdated ideas of “non-alignment,” “strategic partnerships,” or worse, “moral diplomacy,” then we are choosing blindness in a world of knives.

The time has come to say it without filters: India must not, and cannot, trust any other country. Not the West, not the Islamic world, not the so-called BRICS allies. No one.

Let me explain why — with facts, recent events, and the bitter history that we refuse to learn from.

1. The West: Friendly Smiles, Backstabbing Hands

The United States and its allies claim to be “natural partners” with India. But the reality is bitter:

- During the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War, while India was defending human rights and stopping a genocide, America sent the 7th Fleet to threaten us — all to protect Pakistan.

- Even today, the U.S. gives billions in military aid to Pakistan, the very country that sends terrorists into Kashmir.

- When India purchases weapons from Russia (to defend itself), the U.S. threatens us with CAATSA sanctions.

The West cries foul over India’s CAA, Article 370, and anti-conversion laws, pretending to care about “human rights,” but remains silent when Hindus are butchered in Pakistan, Afghanistan, or Kashmir.

They want India to be a subordinate — not a sovereign power.

And look at Canada — a so-called democratic ally. It harbours Khalistani terrorists on its soil, allows them to burn Indian flags, threaten diplomats, and vandalize Hindu temples. And when India takes a firm stand, they cry foul and play the victim.

The hypocrisy is sickening.

2. The Islamic World: United in Silence When Hindus Die

Despite India having over 200 million Muslims, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has never once supported India on Kashmir, terrorism, or cross-border attacks.

Instead:

They routinely pass resolutions against India.

Remain silent when Hindus are ethnically cleansed in Pakistan or Bangladesh.

Condemn India when it dares to act against radical Islamist groups.

Nations like Turkey, Malaysia, and Qatar openly fund anti-India narratives and even host Islamist propagandists.

India has extended trade, oil deals, and even diplomatic courtesy to these nations — but they return it with hostility and treachery.

3. Russia and China: Wolves in Different Clothes

Russia was once a trusted Cold War ally. But that world is long gone.

Russia today is tilting towards China, our greatest enemy.

It has sold weapons to Pakistan, conducted joint military drills with them.

On crucial votes at the UN, Russia has chosen neutrality or abstained when India needed open support.

And then comes China — the biggest long-term threat to Bharat:

After Nehru’s “Hindi-Chini bhai bhai” delusion, we were stabbed in the back in 1962.

China continues to occupy Indian land in Aksai Chin and aggressively intrudes in Ladakh and Arunachal Pradesh.

It has poured money into Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh, trying to encircle India through debt traps and puppet regimes.

It arms Pakistan, supports terrorists at the UN by blocking designations, and uses its tech companies to spy on Indian data.

Can any sane Indian call these countries "trusted partners"?

4. The Western Liberal Agenda: A Trojan Horse

Beyond military or diplomatic betrayal, the cultural and ideological war is equally dangerous.

Foreign-funded NGOs push anti-Hindu narratives, branding Hindus as “oppressors” and terrorists in our own land.

Woke identity politics is exported into Indian universities through grants, scholarships, and leftist “activism.”

Movements like “Break India,” “Kiss of Love,” “Love Jihad denial,” “Shaheen Bagh,” and the Farmer Protests were all amplified by Western media and money.

These are not coincidences. They are part of a long game to weaken Bharat’s civilizational identity.

5. When It Really Mattered, We Were Alone

Let’s list a few events that should have shattered our illusions:

- Doklam (2017) – Not a single global power condemned China.

- Pulwama (2019) – After 40 jawans were killed, most Western nations asked India to “exercise restraint.”

- Galwan (2020) – While our soldiers fought bravely, not one country took a firm stand against China’s aggression.

- Khalistan Violence Abroad (2023–24) – No ally stepped in to stop attacks on Indian diplomatic missions.

In every moment of crisis, India stood alone — as it always will.

6. Economic Slavery Through Aid and Corporations

Foreign "aid" and "investment" come with invisible chains.

The World Bank, IMF, and Western think tanks pressure India to adopt reforms that weaken our self-sufficiency.

Foreign MNCs control our media, influence policymaking, and promote anti-national content in the name of “creative freedom.”

Digital giants like Google, YouTube, and Meta actively censor nationalist voices, promote minority appeasement, and push left-liberal propaganda.

They don’t want a strong India — they want a divided, dependent, diluted India.

7. India Must Wake Up: Self-Reliance or Self-Destruction

India must finally learn what Chanakya taught centuries ago:
"There is some self-interest behind every friendship. There is no friendship without self-interest. This is a bitter truth."

So, what should India do?

Trust no one blindly.

- Build Atmanirbhar Bharat — in defence, tech, energy, agriculture, education.

- Shut down foreign-funded Trojan Horses — in media, academia, and NGOs.

- Speak in the language of power, not apology.

- Build alliances only based on mutual benefit, not historical emotions.

Final Words: Only the Nation Is Sacred

India is not respected because of our tolerance.
India is respected when we are powerful, unapologetic, and united.

Foreign nations will praise India only as long as we are useful to them — and they will ditch us the second their priorities shift. That’s the law of the jungle we live in.

It’s time we stop chasing friends and start building fortresses — of culture, economy, military, and civilizational pride.

Many are not agree with me in this, but for me Nation is the first Priority. I want to see My Bharat has Vishwaguru. 

Because we are already witnessed in the past.. we are recovering now.

One more thing I want to be clear here.
Bharat is not Developing Nation, It is recovering Nation.. 
Once we Recover - Again Bharat will be the Vishwaguru

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